The way I see it, it looks different when not only the Emperor waggles
his naked belly.

On 16 Feb., 11:48, Vamadevananda <[email protected]> wrote:
> " But it does indicate the importance of recruiting active leaders to
> a cause ..."
>
> Neil, whatever happened to your pathological aversion to " leaders "
> and leadership ?
>
> On Feb 16, 1:57 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Democracies work better. It has long been held that decisions made
> > collectively by large groups of people are more likely to turn out to
> > be accurate than decisions made by individuals. The idea goes back to
> > the “jury theorem” of Nicolas de Condorcet, an 18th-century French
> > philosopher who was one of the first to apply mathematics to the
> > social sciences. Now it is becoming clear that group decisions are
> > also extremely valuable for the success of social animals, such as
> > ants, bees, birds and dolphins. And those animals may have a thing or
> > two to teach people about collective decision-making.
> > Animals that live in groups make two main sorts of choices: consensus
> > decisions in which the group makes a single collective choice, as when
> > house-hunting rock ants decide where to settle; and combined
> > decisions, such as the allocation of jobs among worker bees.
>
> > Condorcet’s theory describes consensus decisions, outlining how
> > democratic decisions tend to outperform dictatorial ones. If each
> > member of a jury has only partial information, the majority decision
> > is more likely to be correct than a decision arrived at by an
> > individual juror. Moreover, the probability of a correct decision
> > increases with the size of the jury. But things become more
> > complicated when information is shared before a vote is taken. People
> > then have to evaluate the information before making a collective
> > decision. This is what bees do, and they do it rather well, according
> > to Christian List of the London School of Economics, who has studied
> > group decision-making in humans and animals along with Larissa Conradt
> > of the University of Sussex.
> > Dr List looked at colonies of honeybees (Apis mellifera), which in
> > late spring or early summer divide once the swarm reach a certain
> > size. The queen goes off with about two-thirds of the worker bees to
> > live in a new home leaving a daughter queen in the nest with the
> > remaining worker bees. Among the bees that depart are scouts that
> > search for the new nest site and report back using a waggle dance to
> > advertise suitable locations. The longer the dance, the better the
> > site. After a while, other scouts start to visit the sites advertised
> > by their compatriots and, on their return, also perform more waggle
> > dances. The process eventually leads to a consensus on the best site
> > and the swarm migrates. The decision is remarkably reliable, with the
> > bees choosing the best site even when there are only small differences
> > between two alternatives. By tinkering around with a computer
> > simulation they found that computerised bees that were very good at
> > finding nesting sites but did not share their information dramatically
> > slowed down the migration, leaving the swarm homeless and vulnerable.
> > Conversely, computerised bees that blindly followed the waggle dances
> > of others without first checking whether the site was, in fact, as
> > advertised, led to a swift but mistaken decision. The researchers
> > concluded that the ability of bees to identify quickly the best site
> > depends on the interplay of bees’ interdependence in communicating the
> > whereabouts of the best site and their independence in confirming this
> > information.
>
> > Simon Hix, also of the London School of Economics, and his colleagues
> > examined voting in the EU Parliament and concluded that, as might be
> > expected, it was along party-political lines even though the
> > incentives to do so were far less than at national parliaments. Dr Hix
> > and his colleagues reckon that European parliamentarians share the
> > collection of information but, unlike the honeybees, they do not
> > necessarily progress to investigating the issues for themselves before
> > taking a vote.
>
> > There is danger in blindly following the party line, a danger that the
> > honeybees seem to avoid. Condorcet’s theory fails to consider whether
> > there is an inbuilt bias among a group that comes together to consider
> > a problem. This “groupthink” occurs when people copy one another.
> > According to Dr List: “The swarm manages to block and prevent the kind
> > of groupthink that can bedevil good decision making.” Dr List adds
> > that people demonstrate this kind of bad decision-making when
> > investors pile into a stock and others follow, creating a bubble for
> > which there is no good reason.
>
> > Another form of groupthink occurs when people are either isolated from
> > crucial sources of information or dominated by other members of the
> > group, some of whom may have malevolent intent. This too has now been
> > demonstrated in animals. José Halloy of the Free University of
> > Brussels used robotic cockroaches to subvert the behaviour of living
> > cockroaches and control their decision-making process. In his
> > experiment, reported in an earlier issue of Science, the artificial
> > bugs were introduced to the real ones and soon became sufficiently
> > socially integrated that they were perceived as equals. By
> > manipulating the robots, which were in the minority, he was able to
> > persuade the cockroaches to choose an inappropriate shelter—even one
> > which they had rejected before being infiltrated by machines. Could
> > this form the basis of a new way of catching them?
>
> > The way animals make collective decisions can be complex. Nigel Franks
> > of the University of Bristol, in England, and his colleagues studied
> > how a species of ants called Temnothorax albipennis establish a new
> > nest. In the Royal Society journal they report how the insects
> > mitigate the disadvantages of making a swift choice. If the ants’
> > existing nest becomes threatened, the insects send out scouts to seek
> > a new one. How quickly they accomplish this transfer depends not only
> > on how soon the ants agree on the best available site but also on how
> > quickly they can migrate there. When a suitable place is identified,
> > the scouts begin to lead other scouts, which had remained behind to
> > guard the old nest, to the new site. The problem is that if the
> > decision is reached rapidly, as it might have to be in an emergency,
> > then relatively few scouts know the route. It would then take much
> > longer to train all the scouts needed to achieve the transfer, which
> > involves carrying the queen, the workers and the brood to the new
> > nest.
>
> > Dr Franks and his colleagues identified a type of behaviour called
> > “reverse tandem runs” that makes the process more efficient. During
> > the carrying phase of migration, the scouts lead other scouts back
> > along the quickest route to the old nest so that more scouts become
> > familiar with the route. Thus the dynamics of collective decision-
> > making are closely entwined with the implementation of these
> > decisions. How this might pertain to choices that people might make
> > is, as yet, unclear. But it does indicate the importance of recruiting
> > active leaders to a cause because, as the ants and bees have
> > discovered, the most important thing about collective decision-making
> > is to get others to follow.
>
> > The above is cut down from this week's Economist.  This work is recent
> > but much of it has been known since the beginning of my career.  I
> > wonder what it is in human decision making that screws us up?  The
> > idea of robots being intentionally used to feed us mis-information
> > seems rather likely!  Indeed, we seem to be governed by them.
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